Everest Advance Base Camp Trek

Potala Palace: Built at an altitude of 3,700 m (12,100ft.), Potala Palace is named after Mount Potalaka.

The present Potala Palace was built mainly in the 5th Dalai Lama’s reign between 1645-1693 and remained the center of political and religious for the Dalai Lamas containing the living quarters of Dalai lamas while they lived, and the magnificent golden tombs when they died.

This architectural wonder – a spectacular edifice whose gold roofs soar high above the town and rise more than 300 meters above the valley floor can be seen from all directions for miles around.

Today the Potala is a state museum with 35 caretakers monks, but to many thousands of Tibetan pilgrims it remains a beloved shrine.

Rongbuk Monastery: Built by a local lama in about 1899, altitude is 5, 000 m. (16, 404.2 ft.) more or less, which is the highest among all the temples in the world, is located in the Shigatse Region, southwest of the mysterious Tibet Autonomous Region, and to the north of the oblate Mt. Everest, the highest peak in the world.

Walking forward from Rongbuk Monastery, you will see the famous Rongbuk Glacier Zone, which is the largest among all the hundreds of glaciers formed around the Mt. Everest. The three glaciers north of the Mt. Everest flow south and congregate at a river traversing the foot of the monastery. This is called 'Rongbuk River', and the water there is extremely cold.